The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 55, Ed. 1 Monday, June 11, 1934 Page: 3 of 8
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MONDAY, JUNE 11, 1934.
EL RENO (OK.) DAILY TRIBUNE
IS RULED IM
French Court Sets Pre-
cedence on Issue
Nice (U,Ri—In Prance, i married
person now can make n leeallv
valid will depriving (lie surviving
partner of his. or her. share in the
p.'tate In case of remarriage.
The First Chamber of I he local
Civil Court has just set a precedent,
in ruling this wav. 4 Madame
Dupont wife of a civil servant
l hew*. rerent.lv died, lenvine her
j husband an S8on annuity, on con-
dition that he did not rpmarrv. in
which case the income was to go
to a hospital.
The husband did remarry, hut
hp surd for the annuity, anruing
that the condition nan Inst, rpmnr-
riace wa* an imnosition on his
nersonnl liberty therefore legally
Immoral, and that It had hern
dietated bv nnlustified ien'nusv.
The liosoitnl maintained that
the rtnuee woc nerfectlv pinmi
that Mndame Oupont was lnelrl
when she made her will, that
Monsieur Duoonl had not been
able to nrove anv low motive on
M«dame’s nen behind the elause.
whleh clearly was inspired by
Mndnme’s Interest |n rharltv fully
demonstrated by her deeds during
he>- lifetime.
The Court retorted Monsieur
J P"nont's suit holdln" valid the
Will 111 favor Of the hosnilal trhleh
also yets the residue, several apart-
ment house and real estate.
tusk soono vmrs oi.n
Feeley Mont. A fossilized
|valrus hettevc't to he more
than 50 000 veers old was found
near hpro by p j Christie. Oe-
o|eais*s believe the tusk was bur-
ied alone the han^s of .a once-
areat-Hver Which tlowert fhrQHt’h
Stills 'alley before the CVnrinl A»e
J—aud at n time when the Rnckv
Mountains which rim Ferjrv, were
"mole-hill*."
DIET AND HEALTH
How Flat-Foot Caused
And Best Treatment for It
By LOGAN CLENUEN1NG, M. D.
THEKE ARE four common dls-
saaes of the foot. First, ringworm
nfectlon of the skin, so-called ath-
tie’s foot, which we will not discuss
at the present.
Second, flat-foot.
Third, coin*. And
fourth, ingrown
toenail.
Flut-foot Is due
to breaking down
of one of the
arches of the
foot. There are
two of these
a r c h « »—o n e
which runs from
the base of the
toes back to the
heel; another
runs from the
base of the big
toe to the base of
the little toe. One
Is from front to
to side.
as infantile paralysis, but mostly It
is due to bad habits of standing,
walking and the occupation* which
require a great deal of time on the
feet and eventually break the com-
pensation of the muscles.
Flat-foot, as could be imagined
from this description, goes through
a aerie* of change*, and may be seen
Or. Clendc-nlng
of these, you see,
buck, the other from side
The impress of * healthy foot should
show thut It Is resting on the heel,
on the outer border, end across the
halls of I he toes. In other words,
the Inner margin of the foot should
not touch the door.
These arches arc formed of a series
of small bones held together by ten-
dons. The tendons themselves could
not support the weight of the aver-
age adult hoily for any length of
time without sagging. Their support
comes, then, from the muscle* of the
foreleg. These long muscles attach
to the bon«* of the leg below the
SPEC! A I,
l*alf r.A<* anti up
I.'lilies liaK soli's 10c nml «r
I.‘»il«es leather heel lips IRc
Fori Reno Shin* Shop
I HI South (I..k taw
TYPEWRITERS \NI>
ADDING MACHINES
New amt Reromlitloned
HALF - RENTALS—I! MM IRS
HENRY RKHNE
Tenewrtter Dept Phone ?*l
R. A.
(ALFRED)
BRUCE
DEMOCRAT FOR
COUNTY
TREASURER
E'ullv Qualified—
Strict Economy
X-rry t,f normal arched toot. Inner
ihiidouctl parti are bonei.
knee, and throw tendons down around
the arches of the feet. It I* the
bieikdown of these muscle* which
c*U: -* the arche> to sag and. there-
fore. causes tlsl toot. Sometime* this
is du* to disease of the muscles, such
X-ray of flat foot of machinist tvho
Hands many hours a day.
In many stages of development.
First, there is the beginning ot the
break, in which the muscles are
straining to do their work against
undue odds, and we flail a toot which
shows no special flatness of the
archea, but It constantly painful both
in the foot and In the leg and knee,
where these muscles are attached.
Later the muscles give way and
the fdS is actually flat on the floor.
In this stage It is also painful. Later
on, complete breaking of the arch
an losa of compensation of the mus-
cles occurs, and we bave what la
called a "static flat-foot” which, while
It la not a very flexible or useful
foo*. la not ** painful as In the early
stages.
Treatment will, of course, depend
ou th* stag* of the disease and cir-
cumstances. In the early stags, ex-
sreise to strengthen ths muscles, the
removal of undue strain from stand-
ing occupation, proper Instruction
about walking, and proper foot-rf ar.
may prevent any of the more seri-
ous consequences of the later stages.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Six pamphlets
by Dr. Clendening can now be ob-
tained by sending 10 cents In coin, for
earn, and a self-addressed envelope,
stamped with a threo-cent stamp,
to Dr. Logan Clendening, in cure of
this paper. The pamphlets are:
"Indigestion and Constipation,” "Re-
ducing and Ualnlng.” "Infant Feed-
ing." "Instruction* for the Treatment
of Diabetes.” "Feminine Hygiene"
and "Th* Care of the Hair and Skin ”
LOCAL BRIEFS
I Miss Katherine Stpehr. Miss Ruth
Reed, Harold Barrett and Juhnnt -
Spencer were Oklahoma City visi-
tor* Sunday.
THREE
Two Other League Games
Set for This Week
Two games are scheduled for 6
p. m. tonight at I-egion park in
the Commercial league softball play
with the lawyers meeting the El
Reno Mill and The Tribune-L’hev-
rolet teuni engaging the Round-
house.
The Lawyers will battle the pow-
erful Mill nine which is unde-
feated this round. The Roundhouse
game with The Trlbune-Chevrolet
team was originally scheduled two
weeks ago, but was deferred due
to the Memorial day holiday.
Tuesday night the Bock Island
office crew will tangle with the
Roundhouse, and Wednesday night
The Tribune-Chevrolet team will
encounter the City Hall.
census this summer and fall will
provide abtout 100,000 jobs .. .'.The
G. O. P. charges it’s a scheme to
"buy the election'll.____ Congress
Republicans who have voted for
most of the New Deal bills are
grateful that the national commit-
tee left tliem room to sidestep.....
The depression lias brought about
an Immense increase of good roads
throughout the country......Con-
gress appropriates $003.0001)00 more
for highways...... Our attaches
In Russiu report that Stalin plans
to give Russia youth- girls us well
as boys- military training for four
months this summer In t>4 camps
ot 250,000 pach. taught by Red army
officers..... That means some 16
million young people in training—
for what?
* * *
tifiSM Numskou,
' l,c'WA'
jr ^ <oui<
pp.'Ora ' .
7
NEW YORK ANGLE
By JAMES MrMITl.MN
No. 1
Continued From
Page One
Mrs. Millie Cowley, Mi and Mr*
P. R. Johnson and children. I <oui.se,
Daniel and Hay were guests Sun-
| day of Mis. Cowley's parents. Rev
I :tml Mrs W. A. Haynes In Marlow
Miss Dorothy Jean Prull, of Okla-
homa City. Is a guest in Uv* home
I of her aunt. Mrs. H. M. Hensley
and Mr Hensley, 815 South Ellison
avenue.
Rev. Percy W B-< k f.'lT. S >ulh
Rim k Island avenue, spent Monday
ai the Twin Hill Golf and Country,
club in Oklahoma City.
Mi m • Tartlet Mr O W
OlUtsple and dau ■ ht« r Dolores, of j
Clinton, were guests Sunday of
Mi Mary Mass, 408 North Rock
Island avenue.
Dr Ruv Oley. ot Hobart, is a
I guest of Dr Mi'lvln A Kiesel, 801
! South Kuck Island avenue.
Mr and Mr., F Howard Morris,
<.00 South Williams avenue, were
ovei ttte week-end <>f Mrs
O. F. Oo'sett In PI •dmont
for or against it.
Senator Long had assistance from
Senator Henrik Shipstead, Minn-
esota Former-Laborite, but Huey's
colleagues suspect him of taking a
secret delight In digging this tick-
lish issue out after it had been so
well burled.
* * *
It only took a second to make 4
out of 2 and 2 the other day when
several South Carolina appoint-
ments apoeared on the list sent
daily to the senate for confirma-
tion.
Observers surmised, and correctly,
that President Roosevelt and Sena-
tor “Cotton Ed” Smith, of S. C.,
had made a bargain whereby the
senator would stand aside and let
Prof. Rex Tugwell's nomination as.
undersecretary of agriculture ride
through.
"Cotton Ed" got his local pat-
ronage this time. But he knows
that future olums will take even
more shake-down.
* * *
Notes
To save trouble and get his men
at work the president will fill the
federaE securities and exchange
commission bv recess appointments
Then the senate can't oust them. If
it should try. before the end of the
next session......The employment
Oil
Harry Sinclair gives the oil in-
dustry a pain in Hie neck.
His unionization agreement with
the American Federation and the
wage increase granted by Consoli-
dated Oil weren't due to love for
labor. It was that uuion . organi-
zation had gone much further
among Sinclair employes than oili-
er oil companies and he. was con-
fronted by a strike threat that
meant business.
Sinclair either hhcT to graht la-
bor’s demands or face a serious
shutdown that would give his com-
petitors a chance to make hay at
ills expense. The informed say lie
figured he couldn't be any worse
off by making a deal with labor and
might get the jump on the field.
It looks as If this strategy will
work. Labor certainly won’t rest
on Its laurels and It's a cinch the
ether big producers will sooner or
later have to follow his lead to
keep out of trouble probably soon-
er Sinclair can afford to sit back
and laugh while they wriggle. The
other oil coroorutions are well
aware of the pit he's dug for them
— and are they annoyed!
* * *
Technique
local Insiders figure the Sinclair
agreement as organized labor’s big-
gest victory to date. It’s the first
important breach In major indus-
try's open shop walls since Section
7A was enacted and its significance
as a precedent can hardly be over-
rated
One reason for labor’s success
was the skill nnd secrecy of the en-
rollment work The A. F. of L
profited by Its mistakes in the mo-
tor Industry. This time minor
leaders weren’t permitted to indulge
emm
DE/Mt NOAH • WOOtCJ A,
HFM V-JHO LAID ONkf
2 A WEEIC.WE
CONSIDERED a
poTTCN-e«-‘-A'i'e»?
DltALWAVL C3iy».LlT»t,t«tlMN.
PEAS*. NOAM’ WOULD an
epucat*p m&s count
her. CMiOcC/qS BEFORE
"Tuey wepe matchesu':
MAS H.B BfcVAN, -roiLe*, O.
'-.enl in s»ui*. duiv>sTfiti
70 OBSB ilDSh IN
in preliminary growling add chest
thumping* to warn the opposition
\vhat was up and give it a ciauice
to break up organization activities
before they were fairly started by
'firing union members. Also in
stead of weakening the assault, by
spreading it tbinly over a far-flung
industry -there was shrewd c-uiuvn-
•tration of forces at one vulnerable
spot.
Keen New York observers believe
was issued soon after a conference
between Irvin and General John-
son. They figure this was more
than coincidence and take It as
evidence that NRA isn’t wholly un-
sympathetic to their viewpoint.
* * *
Guaranty
Sale of the Guaranty Co.—Guar-
anty Trust’s securities affiliate —
to Edward B. Smith & Co. was a
Surprise solution to a knotty pro-
blem.
It was reached only after a
group of tile Guaranty Co.'s of-
ficers—headed by Joseph R. Swann
—had exhausted channels through
which they themselves had hoped
to control the successor to the af-
filiate. They couldn’t raise the
necessary cash. The bank didn’t
feel it could contribute capital
without running Into a legal Jam
and oilier sources failed to come
across. The Smith deal was ar-
langed through personal friend-
ships between Smith partners and
Guaranty executives.
* * *
Employes
The Guaranty Trust Is especially
proud of the manner in which it
protected Its affiliate's employes.
T5‘" of them will be taken over by
the Smith-Swunn combine. Others
Will be kept to liquidate the Guar-
anty Co. which will take three
years. Still others will be absorb-
ed by the bank Itself. There are
only 50 whose Jobs aren't secured in
advance and the bank Intends to
help them find others.
This is a far better record than
tile National City and Chase were
ubl ■ to show in dismantling their
PLANS FOB NORTH TREK
Vladivostok (U.R)—In line with Its
policy of stimulating commercial
traffic with the Siberian far north,
the Soviet Commissariat of Wa-
terways plans to send an expedi-
tion from here to the mouth of
the Kolima River in mid-June. The
expedition will be composed of
three ships, carrying crews totaling
140 men as well as 600 passengers.
The vessels will carry a cargo of
food and technical equipment. They
will return with furs.
UNION HALL
rwecu w*w xum uuecrvrr.N uem*vt* * ”• »»» u».->»uuiiuini5 whjit
the triumph lias saved William I offillate*. They may call as the
Green's teetering throne. It's un-
derstood here the victorious tech-
nique should be credited largely to
him. His followers have demand
ed more action They got it with-
out the economic casualties of a
strike.
* * *
Difference
hardest-boiled bank in the country
but we ll stack our record as hum-
anitarians against any competitor."
* * *
Chairman
The local grapevine hinte that B
A McKinney—governor of the Dal-
las lederul reserve bank- has the
Inside track for Eugene Black's job
chairman of the federal reserve
, . , a* chairman of me teaerni l
Tlie Sinclair win—even though ^ board when the latter quits. Me-
the follow-up carries through Liu*
whole oil industry does not imply
a similar outcome in steel. For one
thing the oil magnates- while open
shoppers by inclination—are by no
means as fanatical about it as their
steel brethren. For anotlier the
union build-up among steel work-
ers hus been pretty mueh of a flop.
Tile organizers tipped their hands
too soon.
l,oeal conservatives are cheered
by W A Irvin’s vigorous assault
on the rank-and-file coininitU*e ax
Irresponsible radicals and Ills appeal
to U 8 Steel employes to stand by
their company's guns. The blast
Kinney is a friend of Jesse Jones.
Any governor of u regional bunk
who accepts the chairmanship sac-
rifices from $12,000 to $28,000 a year
in salary.
* * *
Sidelights
June automobile production is
estimated at 200.000 unite as again-
st 336.000 in May and 379.uoo in
April — Several big auto makers
are experimenting with rear - end
motors.......New York Central's
earniiiKK are estimated at 70 cents
a share net on the common for 1924
bused on figures to date.
<Copyright 1924 for The Trlbunei
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Schroder
and daughter, Loretta, were in
Oklahoma City Wednesday.
Mrs. H. 31mon3 is reported to
be seriously ill With bronchial
pneumonia.
Laura Anmwehat and Margaret
Moore were visitors of Genevleva
Miller Wednesday.
Miss Hilda Peters is reported
very much improved from her
tonsil operation.
Birth
Mr. and Mra. J. M. Darla,. 1 are
the proud paren* . of a baby daugh-
ter born June 5.
Miss Lucille Kordis of Lacy is a
visitor of her uncle. Charles Rivers
and family.
Billers are the proud owners of
a new house, which they will
move into In a week nr so.
Accidentally Shut
Mrs. Gertrude Brown of King-
fisher, negress, wiis accidentally
shot and killed. She ma visiting
Mrs. 8. P. Porter, sister of BUI
Leatherman, of Watonga.
She leaves five children orphans
now. as her husband died March
9. 1934
Interment will be made in the
Kingfisher cemetery.
Presbyterian flub
The monthly meeting of the
Presbyterian Men's club was held.
There wrre many visitors from
Enid and F.l Reno.
An address wai given by Dr.
Elias Margo of Oklahoma City
about crippled children.
Two piano selection* by Delbert
Scott and some singing wus lead
by John Bentley. Tlie ladies of
church served a delicious dinner.
Mrs. W. H. Reilly has returned
home from a world tour. She
landed in New York City last
Thursday and spent some time
seeing the city before she return-
ed home.
She traveled by air, rail, auto,
ocean, boat and covered over 44,-
342 miles. The tour was made
mostly In the southern hemisphere.
And was conducted by Thomas
Cook rompnnv and Ward .Steam-
ship company. «*—l
"I
Ait Interesting New
Discovery Every Smoker
^ Should Know!
*
Experience of Camel Smokers Confirmed!
In New Yoik a fimouv mrinli laboratory snnoumrt a
basic discovery that throw' new light on our past
knowledge of cigarettes. It embodies an "energiring
effect" Through it the flow of your natural energy it
tenured in a harmiets .., utterly delightful manner.
Fatigue and irritability quickly fade away. Thui an ex
prnrnre long known t« Camel smoker* haa received new
acieniitic conbrnuiion. You do "get a lift with a Camel,"
and it ia a pleasme that you tan tepeai at often as
needed—all day long For Cauiela never get on your nerve*.
NEW Beauty
and Convenience
...In this Hig Damp-
Drier .Model...
E&5Y
'ZVpiiTitfm
WASHER
It'a the one washer you will want to own, because
. . . it washes FASTER ... it washes CI.F.ANEK
. . . if is easier on CLOTHES ... if costs less to
operate I
Your Weekly
Savings on
‘Washing' u ill
Fay for it!
FREE
Trial
sstcar $U9.50
OTHER EASY MODELS
as Low as
Oklahoma
2!!L4SUPPlYi2.
In Your Own
Home I
t
101 No. Bickford
Phone .114
I
" Camels aiv R
made from finar,
MORE EXPENSIVE
TOBACCOS-Turkiah
and Domaatio — than
any other papu-
■ far brand. J
Feel Played Out?
Let CAMELS increase
Your Flow of Energy
Are you irritable...cross and fusty
when tired ? Then light j Camel.
As you enjoy its cool, rich flavor...
notice how quickly you feel your
flow of natural energy restored.
This fact is known to many
through their own experience.
How that "done-in" feeling drops
away. How your natural pep and
energy come flooding back anJ
you are again able to face the
"next move” with a smile!
NATURAL ENERGY
Iff RELEASED
The rffret is produced by Camels in
a wholly safe, natural, and utterly
delightful way. So, whenever you
feel run-down, tired and irritable,
just light a Camel. Fnjoy its fra-
grance to the full—let your flow of
energy swing luck - and you are
your real self again!
NO NERVE IRRITATION
WITH CAMELS
You can smoke just as many
Camels as you want-and it’s a
pleasure that actually helps you to
maintain your energy.
And tbe finer, more txptmivt
InbJa in in Carnets never gel on
your nerved
■ ’
T,I<CD °VT
CAMELS
Costlier Tobaccos
never get on
your Nerves,
f^flVC.-.and then
1
VTATCH OUT for weariness and irritability that come from a
low lescl of energy. Smoka a Camel for a quick comeback in
the flow of natural, healthful energy.,,at frequently ai you
wish. You will feel like your real self again, and you'll like Jfi
Camels-a matchless bleod of costlier tobaccosl
iisi. a i
a Llll with a Camel !7’
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Vandivier, Davis O. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 55, Ed. 1 Monday, June 11, 1934, newspaper, June 11, 1934; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc917724/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.